A suitcase full of ballots was pushed out from under the table after the poll watchers were removed.

1) Surveillance footage shows a suitcase full of ballots being pushed out from under a table after the Georgia poll watchers have been removed.

Video footage from Georgia shows that the suitcases filled with ballots were hidden under the table and not pulled out until the supervisor instructed the poll workers to leave the room.

Although the poll watchers were ordered to leave the counting facility, four people remained to pull the suitcases from under the table and continue counting the ballots inside.

According to the person who interpreted the video at the Georgia Senate Judiciary Subcommittee election hearing, the person who hid the four suitcases was the same person who ordered the poll watchers to leave “under the pretense that we were going to stop counting the ballots.”

“Why are these ballots separate from the other ballots? And why did they kick people out and only go to the count when there were no witnesses?”

2) Trump tweets: 100 sampled ballots in Arizona fail by 3%

On Dec. 2, Trump tweeted, “In Arizona, it turns out that 3% of the votes in a sample of 100 counted were fraudulent or worse. If it continues, this will be about 90,000 more votes than we need to win the state. Now we are allowed to sample even more ballots. Wow!”

3) Trump: Barr “Did Nothing” About Election Fraud

President Trump on Thursday declined to say whether he still had confidence in Attorney General William P. Barr, saying Mr. Barr had ignored evidence of election fraud.

“Ask me that question again in a couple of weeks,” the president told reporters at an event in the Oval Office. “He didn’t do anything about it. It’s disappointing that they didn’t look very hard for evidence. They should be looking at all this fraud. It’s a very bad crime.”

Mr. Barr said earlier this week that he had not seen evidence of widespread election fraud.

“They found a tremendous amount of evidence …… it was massive fraud,” Mr. Trump said of his legal team, “and whether you go to Wisconsin, Michigan … . all over the country, they know this is a rigged election.”

4) Supreme Court Opposes California Governor’s Ban on Indoor Religious Ritual Restrictions

On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with churches against California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s epidemic-related ban on indoor religious services, calling the governor’s ban unconstitutional religious discrimination.

The justices, without dissent, set aside a lower court ruling that had rejected a challenge to Newsom’s policy by several church associations in the state.

The Supreme Court justices directed the lower court to reconsider the case in light of their ruling in New York.

5) U.S. Department of Justice sues Facebook

The U.S. Department of Justice has sued Facebook, accusing the social media company of illegally reserving high-paying jobs for its sponsored immigrant employees instead of seeking out available U.S. workers who could fill those positions.

In a 17-page complaint filed Thursday, the Justice Department’s civil rights division said Facebook failed to adequately advertise at least 2,600 positions between 2018 and 2019 that were filled by immigrants with H-1B high-skilled visas, and that the company was seeking to sponsor those workers for permanent residency, or green cards.

Companies that sponsor employees for employment-based green cards must prove, as part of the federal petition process, that they can’t find any qualified U.S. workers to fill the positions.

The lawsuit alleges that Facebook does not post the reserved positions on its website and requires candidates to mail in applications rather than accepting them online.

“And even if Americans applied, Facebook would not consider them for employment,” the lawsuit states. “Simply put, Facebook reserves these positions for temporary visa holders.”

6) Majority of Voters Oppose Speech Censorship at Big Tech Companies

According to Scott Rasmussen’s latest “Just the News Daily” poll, the vast majority of American voters oppose speech control and censorship by big tech companies on their social media platforms.

More than one-third of voters surveyed, 36 percent, said that large technology companies, including social media giants such as Facebook and Twitter, are “biased and go too far in violating free speech.

Twenty-eight percent said that such companies “have good intentions, but they should not regulate speech.

7) AOC’s new merchandise sold online exposes the radical left’s lack of self-awareness

New York Socialist Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) debuted new merchandise on Thursday, high-priced clothing that only wealthy liberals can afford.

Among the new AOC merchandise is a $65 sweatshirt that simply reads “tax the rich.

The irony is, do rich people buy sweatshirts that tax them?